Cards (4)

  • Buss (1989)
    research supporting mate preference related to anisogamy
    carried out a survey of over 10,000 adults across 33 countries
    questions asked related to age and other evolutionary attributes that should influence partner preference
    results showed that females respondents placed greater value on resource related characteristics e.g financial prospects, ambition, industriousness
    males valued reproductive capacity e.g good looks, chastity, preference for younger mates than females
    findings showed that sex differences in mate strategies due to anisogamy and predictions about partner preference derived from sexual selection theory
    findings are applicable across cultures
  • Clark & Hatfield (1989)
    inter-sexual selection support
    showed that female choosiness is a reality of heterosexual relationships
    male and female psychology students were sent out across a university campus
    they approached other students
    they asked, 'I've noticed you around campus. I find you very attractive, would you go to bed with me tonight?'
    they found that 0% of female students agreed whilst 75% if males did immediately
    This supports evolutionary theory - suggests females are choosier than males when it comes to selecting sexual partners and males have a different strategy
  • Bereczei et al (1997) and Chang et al (2011)
    Evolutionary theory
    evolutionary theory ignores the fact that partner preference is shaped by changing social norms of sexual behaviour
    e.g. women's role in the workplace means they're no longer dependent on men to provide for them

    Bereczei - social change has consequences for women's mate preferences which may no longer be resource orientated

    Chang - compared partner preference in China over 25 years and found that some had changed but others remained the same while corresponding with the social change at the time

    mate preference appears to be a combination of evolutionary and cultural influences
  • Singh (1993, 2002)
    strength
    waist-hip ratio
    tested empirically
    males show a preference for a body shape that signals fertility
    males generally find any hip and waist sizes are attractive so long as the ratio of one to the other is around 0.7
    combination of wider hips and narrower waist is attractive as it signals that a woman is fertile but not currently pregnant